Recent close encounters in Active Pass

"A collision in Active Pass could have catastrophic results -- on the
travelling public, on the company, and on the economy of Vancouver
Island,'' Morfitt wrote.
"BC Ferries should, as part of a
formalized risk management process, undertake an assessment of the
degree of risk associated with the current practice of allowing BC
Ferries' vessels to transit Active Pass simultaneously.''
Contributing
to the risk "is the situation where two vessels are making the transit
at a combined closing speed of 30 to 35 knots, with two 90-plus degree
turns, and little room to manoeuvre if either ship has a major
problem,'' Morfitt wrote.
Potential loss of steering control or
propulsion, electrical blackout or human error all pose risks of these
ships colliding with each other or smaller craft.

That was all in reference to two large ships, Spirit class vessels, with twin engines, twin rudders and bow thrusters. Things have changed.

BC Ferries now has two double-enders passing each other in Active Pass. The Super-C class is not as maneuverable as the Spirit class and has encountered some serious problems with the "forward" propeller control.

But that's not what this is about. Morfitt said, back in 2007, that BC Ferries use of Active Pass created a significant risk. BC Ferries responded with a risk assessment that essentially said they were handling things quite nicely - thank you.

However, not all is well in Active Pass. In January 2013, BC Ferries had at least two dangerous close-quarters incidents in Active Pass and you, traveller, have heard nothing about them.